In 2001, a song called How You Remind Me was ubiquitous and quite inescapable.
The band responsible, Nickelback, are back with new album All The Right Reasons, a record that marks a change of line-up for the Canadian pop rockers.
musicOMH.com caught up with recently shorn lead singer Chad Kroeger for a chat about their new band member, collaborations with ZZ Top and a tribute to Damageplan axeman Dimebag Darrell...
"I watched the video for How You Remind Me the other day and, oh my God, I
look like I'm 40! I was 26 when we shot that video. I'm 30 now," says Nickelback front man Chad Kroeger. He's looking
younger than ever, and all he did was pay a visit to the
barber. His hair is a couple of inches shorter and his goatee barely there.
At least he looks more like his brother and Nickelback bass player Mike than
Billy Gibbons from ZZ Top.
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Maybe the Great Bearded one from the legendary
Texan band will soon shave too. After all, he is a self-proclaimed
Nickelback fan, "a point of flattery" for the Canadian band. Gibbons is even
featured on Nickelback's latest opus, All the Right Reasons.
After meeting at a state fair where both bands were playing, Kroeger asked
his tour manager to get him Gibbons' phone number.
"He took the initiative
and got Billy to call me. And when he calls you, it's the coolest feeling on
the planet. You pick up the phone and say 'Hello?' And he goes (imitating
deep Texan voice), 'This is Billy Gibbons. How are ya?'" The one who Kroeger
claims is "Jimi Hendrix's favorite guitar player" ended up playing a few
riffs and adding some vocals on Follow You Home and Rockstar, a song
about the perks of being, you guessed it, a multi-million selling rock act.
"A lot of people think we take ourselves really seriously
and we're this serious band..." - Chad Kroeger bemoans fun, frivolous Nickelback's image.
"We had a lot of fun with that one. Just crazy nonsensical things that help
paint this picture of someone dreaming about being a rock star. It's what
you would also do if you won the lottery. I hope it comes across as us
having a lot of fun and even to some degree, making fun of ourselves." He is
all too aware that they're viewed as a rather serious, brooding rock band.
No parties then? "A lot of people think we take ourselves really seriously
and we're this serious band." The thought is very amusing to him. "Like come
on! For the longest time, I was calling us Jesus and the College Kids!"
Maybe it was that beard.
Another notable guest - and fan - on their new album is a certain "Dimebag"
Darrell Abbott. A good friend of Nickelback's, the Pantera and Damageplan
guitarist's signature solo riffs are included on the track Side of a
Bullet, a tribute to the late Dimebag, who was killed in an onstage
shooting last year by a crazed fan. "That was one of the most senseless acts
that somebody could possibly do," Chad remembers.
The riffs are actually
"bits and pieces that didn't get used" on a recording Chad did of Elton
John's Saturday Night's Alright with Kid Rock and Darrell. "And as it
should happen, I had this guitar riff and it was very, very aggressive. We
started to piece together a solo and we simply didn't have enough material."
"That was one of the most senseless acts
that somebody could possibly do." - Chad Kroeger remembers the killing of Damageplan's Dimebag Darrell.
He figured Pantera may have leftover material they could use. "I called
Vinny, Darrell's brother, the drummer from Pantera, and he sent us tons of
material. We went over all these great signature Dimebag Darrell guitar
solos and pieced together this guitar solo that we're very, very proud of."
What about Vinny? "I played him the song and asked what he thought." Vinny
loved it but told Chad, "You know what I really want you to do, Chad? I want
you to write a song for my brother," not knowing that it was actually a song
for Darrell. Chad still seems incredulous when Vinny "actually asked if he
cold play drums on it. We sent the song to him. He listened to the drums and
said, 'You know what Chad? I don't think I can add anything or take the song
in a different direction. I think your drummer did a fantastic job. You guys
have my blessing.'"
The "fantastic job" is credited to former 3 Doors Down drummer Daniel Adair,
who replaced Nickelback's Ryan Vikedal. So what exactly happened? "We all
wanted to go to the next level, and it just didn't feel like his heart was
in the same place," says Chad. The decision to depart was mutual. "We
decided that it was probably best to go our separate ways. And that's really
tough to do. It's like losing your brother. But there's no ill-will."
"I truly, honestly believe he's one of the best rock
drummers in the world today." - Chad Kroeger on Nickelback's new drummer Daniel Adair.
Adair
has apparently brought in more than his skills. "There's a breath of fresh
air. Not that Ryan wasn't, it's just that Danny takes us in a totally,
completely different direction. He's just so funny." Cracking jokes at the
crack of dawn, Danny is also a whole band rolled into one, claims Chad.
"He's probably a better guitar player than I am, a better bass player than
Mike is, and he can sing like a bird." So what's he doing behind a drum kit?
"He picks up those three-part harmonies and counter-melodies that we could
never do before. I truly, honestly believe he's one of the best rock
drummers in the world today." Like Nickelback is one of Canada's hottest
rock exports.
"It's great that Canada is making a name for itself. Before,
people would simply dismiss bands from Canada. Avril Lavigne, Sum 41, Nelly
Furtado, Alanis Morrisette - all of these artists have definitely put
Canada on the map."